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Silent Spring Revisited

By: Conor Mark Jameson(Author)
288 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: A & C Black
Silent Spring Revisited
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  • Silent Spring Revisited ISBN: 9781472970589 Paperback Apr 2019 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 5 days
    £11.99
    #245639
  • Silent Spring Revisited ISBN: 9781408157602 Hardback May 2012 Out of Print #194952
Selected version: £11.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

Rachel Carson is said to have sparked the modern day environmental movement with the publication of Silent Spring in 1962. She made vivid the gloomy prospect of life without birdsong. But have her warnings been heeded?

Fifty years on, Conor Jameson reflects on the growth of environmentalism since Silent Spring. Using a particular style of nature writing that could be dubbed 'biogumentary', with its engaging narrative momentum, this revealing tale plots milestone events in conservation and cultural/political history to evoke the five decades since 'zero hour', 1962.

Around this, Conor weaves touching personal observation and two decades of notes from his own roles in conservation. It is an attempt to answer the fundamental question: are we silencing the spring? 'It's been an eye-opening exploration of the recent past,' says the author. "It has been startling in places, for me and for colleagues I've spoken to. I think others may be a little startled too."

Customer Reviews

Biography

Conor Jameson is an author who also works for the RSPB. Among his many writing credits are sections in The Private Life of Birds (BBC) and Exploring the Secrets of Nature (Readers Digest). He has a regular column in the RSPB's Birds magazine, on which he is currently New Editor. Conor won BBC Wildlife's Nature Writer of the Year award in 2010.

By: Conor Mark Jameson(Author)
288 pages, no illustrations
Publisher: A & C Black
Media reviews

"A vividly told, beautifully written account of the environmentalist movement of the last fifty years and his own involvement in it [...] the author takes his place among the pre-eminent nature writers of our times. His clear, vivid writing skillfully weaves political and cultural history, personal observation and passionate advocacy for the conservation of our diminishing wildlife to create a book that will endure in the annals of natural history."
– Marie Winn

"If Nick Hornby loved nature, he might write a book like this."
– Martin Harper, RSPB Director of Conservation

"A lively read [...] what makes Jameson's work especially enjoyable is the personal slant [...] "
– Matt Merritt, Editor, Birdwatching

"A fine writer, who brings together an artist's sensibility with a conservationist's sense of reality [...] a vital read."
–John Fanshawe, Birdwatch

"Jameson [...] has skillfully stiched together a narrative that reveals the highs and lows of conservation, and will, I am sure, convince many that the good fight is still worth it."
– Birdwatch

"A clear and concise historical overview of the failures and successes of the conservation movement since the 1960s; and it will rightly find a place on many a conservationist's bookshelf."
British Birds

"Fifty years ago American scientist and author Rachel Carson published the seminal Silent Spring, making vivid the prospect of life without birdsong – and so launched the modern environmental movement. Conor Mark Jameson reflects on this legacy and asks the question – are we still silencing the spring? Every one of the years since 1962 is examined in detail to plot the growth of environmentalism. This annual summary of important milestones is staggeringly thorough and all [...] How on earth has the author remembered or researched all this so thoroughly? The clue comes on page 112. He was inspired to become a 'dedicated diarist' by some words of Laurie Lee [...] Conor Mark Jameson has ensured that the last five decades have not drifted gently away. This significant half-century is summarised for posterity, the debt we owe to the ever-vigilant and campaigning RSPB is clear, and the message is obvious. We are still silencing the spring. But there are isolated beacons of hope. ln the words of Birdlife's US partner Audubon: 'Only citizen action can make a difference for the birds and the state of our future'."
– Bryan Bland, Birding World 25(12), January 2013.

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